The Persian Occupation of Cyprus 
In 525 B.C. the Cypriot kings transferred their allegiance to the Archaemenid (Persian) conquerors of Egypt. The Cypriots retained their independence until the accession of Darius I (522 B.C.) but were then incorporated into the fifth satrapy of the Persian Empire. 

When the Ionians revolted in 499 B.C., all the kingdoms of Cyprus except Amathus joined them; the revolt was suppressed in about a years campaigning, culminating in sieges of Paphos and Soli

Alexander the Great

Alexander the Great

Xeres I's invasion of Greece in 480 B.C. the Cypriot kings, like the Ionians, contributed naval contingents to his forces. During the 5th century Cyprus remained under Persian rule in spite of a major Athenian expedition there in 450/ 499 B.C. Evagoras, who became king of Salamis in 411 B.C., maintained a pro-Hellenic policy, with some help from Athens and succeeded in extending his rule over a large part of the island. He was defeated by the Persians in 381 B.C. and was assassinated in 374 B.C.  

After the victory of Alexander the Great over the last Archaemenid ruler, Darius III, at Issus in 333 B.C., the Cypriot kings rallied to Alexander and assisted him at the siege of Tyre. During the period from 475-325 B.C., known conventionally as the Classical Period, Cypriot art came under strong Attic influence.

 
Reference:

Chronological History